Funny you brought up disposers.....
Hi Jeff,
Long time no talk. Just as I was reading your post here...I heard my dishwwasher (General Electric Potscrubber model GSD98X-02 complete with wood-tone front applique to compliment my wood cabinet kitchen no less) started gurgling back up into my sink.
Becasue it drains into the uppermost inlet of the grind chamber of my disposall, I quickly ran over and flipped the switch on the wall to get the disposer running and whaddaya know....NOTHING, NADA ZILCH.
I stopped the dishwasher and walked into the laundry room, and checked the fuse panel...everything was on and operating like normal. I stooped under the sink where I smelled that faint nastyness of burnt up motor/ electrical smell that both you and I definitly know from vacuum cleaners.
Just to be sure that the wall outlet wasn't dead...I plugged in a vacuum..(suprise,suprise) into the wall outlet under the sink that the disposer plugs into and lo an behold that worked fine...so the disposer just went to hell.....
My disposer is a "cheapo-nast-imatic" Emerson E30, which if you saw it in person would make you blanche and chastise me for having such BOL equipment. I reset the 'Limit switch/overload" on the rear right bottom, replugged it in again to the wall outlet....stood up and flipped the switch...and I heard a faint but powerdraining hummmm...then the switch aforementioned popped again and then silence.
Not wanting to give up quite yet...I used my small soft plastic wrapped malleable hammer and tunked lightly the lowermost bearing that is visible on the underside....about 5-8 times. Reset the switch again....flipped on the power above...and HMMMMMMMMMMM then pop, then nothing.
By this time I was panicking becasue I'm having company over tonight for the 4th after fireworks and neede my casserole dish clean for (grandma's) homeade mac and cheese and ham chunk bake thing that I make that for whatever reason my freinds love...so sweat is starting to bead up on me forehead for not being able to deliver the entree that all desire.
Noticing on the upper most part of the drain pipe that leads down...is this end cap/air-dam mechanism . So, I used my pipe wrench and popped it loose and unscrewed that off and left the uppermost inlet hole wide open. I unhooked the hose coming from the dishwasher and routed that, from the disposer... "riggem'up syle" to that upper orifice. And continued the diswashers cycle.
Now you have to realize here that... I think I've had my head "Way up" under the sink maybe once, twice at the most in the last year...and it was to try to find a Brillo Pad. I was out and had to buy more...but this arrangement will work until I find a suitable replacement her prolly Friday or so.
I wasn't quite done yet with the disposer tho....as a last and final measure of fighting with this decrepit thing...I used my wooden broom and tried to break free the mechanism by doing what all try once... And it diddn't work. HUMMMMMM, POP, then silence. And after that I tired of screwing around with my electrical system...putting all that load on the seperate line...so I just gave in....
My question is. Becasue I NEVER find anything vintage dealing with disposers, and see very few that are worthy of note in resale thrift...what would you reccomend that is made today that is worthy of note, will last me until im 40, I will be 28 on July 30 th BTW...LOL; and finally not cause me to loose blood as I pay for it?
Any Ideas would be super...
Blessed Be
Chad
P.S I just found two of my latest acquistions for the "save the vintage vacuum cleaner program" both being dare I say it....EUREKA'S...
One is the older Eureka upright style 260-B. IT's two tone blue...as if that suprises you, with a "Real" chrome hedlight bezel, metal undercarrige , a two position height adjustment adjusted from underneath, AND suprisingly to me has a square handle instead or a round one a'la Hoover model 60-61, with the three position switch behind the handle a'la Hoover. It's a Twin-Power Automatic...and suprisingly it has the original twill bag which mostly go the way of the Edsel as time passes.
The other one from the same estate sale Is a Eureka ESP Two-Speed Self Propelled,Rugulator with Triple-Filterouter bag and the wonderful chrome Vibra-Groomer II. This machine tomato soup or Crush orangy red with white trim and bumper. It is model 5071-D..the last vacuum cleaner purchased by this couple. Besides some light scratching to the uppermost hood portions of these cleaners..their in perfect shape.
Payment out for both: 260-B = $4.00 , and 5071-D = $10.00. No one can say that there aren't still great deals around. And other than cleanup/ olishing /touchup, new bags, belts and lightbulbs. These machines are ready to go.
The 260-B went to the collection, whereas the 5071-b went to the vacuum clener closet, replacing the Premier as my main upright. That poor girl needs a rest....and I still love it.
Anyway.....